![]() Hallgerðr Long Pants: The wife of a legendary hero, Hallgerðr’s nickname refers to her abnormal height and thus, presumably, the long pants she would have to wear. Þorbjǫrg Coal Brow: Her nickname is a reference to her black hair and eyebrows-but it is not intended as a compliment among Vikings.ġ2. Þóra was said to be so beautiful that she stood out from other women as a hart (or stag) stands out from other animals.ġ1. Þóra Hart of the Castle: Like many women’s nicknames, this is a reference to beauty. Ragnarr Hairy Breeches: The explanation given for this nickname-that Ragnarr was wearing his hairy breeches when he slew a serpent to win his wife’s hand in marriage-makes sense as a momentous occasion worth commemorating, but it doesn’t explain why he was wearing the fur pants to begin with.ġ0. Þórir Leather Neck: He earned what was likely a mocking nickname after attempting to fashion armor with cheaper cowhide.ĩ. Ǫlvir was a friend of children because, according to Landnámabók, “He did not allow himself to catch children on spears, as was then customary among Vikings.”Ĩ. Ǫlvir the Friend of Children: There was a low bar for earning this epithet in Medieval Iceland. Billy Goat Bjǫrn: So-called because he dreamed of a “rock-dweller” and awoke to find an extra male goat amongst his herd, which quickly multiplied and made Bjorn wealthy.ħ. Sometimes, an explanation of the nicknames of non-royal Vikings, however obtuse, was also included in the text. Haraldr War Tooth: There is some discrepancy in the legends about Haraldr-whether he earned his epithet through naturally prominent (and yellow) teeth or whether he was bestowed with a mystical immunity that included re-growing a pair of teeth that were knocked out on his wedding night. The sartorial choice was especially noteworthy after a blow to his bare leg in battle ultimately cost him his life.ĥ. Magnús Barefoot or Barelegged: King Magnus traveled west to the British Isles, where he and his men adopted the kilt styles worn there, and brought the fashion back to Norway. Walking-Hrólfr: A royal count, Hrólfr was said to be given this nickname because he was too large for any horses to carry him, and thus he walked everywhere.Ĥ. Hálfdan the Generous and the Stingy with Food: This contradictory nickname is rooted in a surviving anecdote that claims the king paid his men well, but also starved them.ģ. Óttarr the Vendel Crow: So given because after he was slain in a battle at Vendill, his body was eaten by crows.Ģ. Monarchical nicknames-both legendary and historical-are especially descriptive, and often survive in the Norse canon along with an explanation for the epithet that helps to contextualize the king. ![]() Many-although not all-of the nicknames he cites through the text are pulled from a compendium of Icelandic settlers in the 9th and 10th centuries called Landnámabók (The Book of Settlements) and fall into the following rough categories: “those describing physical features, mental characteristics, and one’s deeds or habits (good or bad).” Often, they're not exactly flattering. ![]() He writes in the abstract, “The quantity of nicknames in Old Norse literature is incomparably rich, and recurring nicknames provide a tool for understanding saga transmission, cultural history, slang, and etymology.” Plus, some of them are really silly. Paul Peterson, now a teaching fellow in Scandinavian and German at Augustana College in Illinois, dedicated his advanced studies to Norse nicknames, completing a masters thesis and doctoral dissertation at the University of Minnesota on the subject. Historical figures had their share of quirky epithets-from Albert the Peculiar to Zeno the Hermit-but the Norse Vikings seem to have had them beat when it comes to comical range and sheer absurdity. Before surnames were a well-established way of telling one Olaf or Astrid from another, identifying nicknames were far more prevalent.
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